Caucus victories in Alaska, Hawaii, and Washington cap a week where the senator won six of seven contests.

March 27, 2016

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Madison, Wisconsin—“So don’t let anyone tell you we can’t win the nomination, or win the general election,” declared Bernie Sanders as he opened a huge rally here Saturday night. “We’re going to do both of those things.”

That was a bold statement, to be sure. It challenged the conventional wisdom that tends to portray the contest for the Democratic presidential nomination as a done deal for front-runner Hillary Clinton. The elite consensus is rooted in a reality (the former secretary of state retains a clear lead in the delegate race) and an assumption (that Clinton will continue to score wins in key states, and that super-delegates will stick with the front-runner). But Sanders was chipping away at the conventional wisdom Saturday night, arguing that, after a remarkable week for his campaign, it is getting harder to write him off.

“Don’t let anyone tell you we can’t win the nomination, or win the general election.”—Bernie Sanders

The week began with the news that the senator had swept the Democrats Abroad “Global Presidential Primary,” winning 69 percent of the vote from Americans living in countries around the world, to just 31 percent for Clinton. On Tuesday, while Clinton took the Arizona primary by a comfortable 58-40 margin, Sanders was winning 78 percent of the vote in the Idaho caucuses. And he won 79 percent of the caucus vote in Utah.

On Saturday, the results were even better for the insurgent. Sanders swept the delegate-rich Washington State caucuses with 73 percent of the vote. He took 71 percent of the vote in the diverse state of Hawaii, where his caucus campaign was enthusiastically supported by Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard and former governor Neil Abercrombie. And Alaska caucus voters gave 82 percent of the vote to Sanders.

But of the last seven states to vote, Sanders carried six—a pattern that had the candidate arguing that, as the competition has moved to Northern and Western states, the tide has turned in his favor.

Clinton still has the most pledged delegates, with CNN putting her total at 1,251. But with Saturday’s wins, Sanders moved past the 1,000 mark to claim 1,012 in the CNN count. Of course, Clinton has a bigger lead when superdelegates are added in—taking her to 1,733, with 1,039 for Sanders. But superdelegates can switch their allegiances, as happened in 2008 when Barack Obama began to gain traction in his race with Clinton.

This year’s Democratic race is far from finished. Sanders still faces an uphill climb, and most pundits will continue to dismiss his prospects. But the recent pattern of wins had a key Sanders backer, Working Families Party National Director Dan Cantor, declaring on Saturday night, “The Sanders campaign has taken a big bite out of the delegate gap. Today’s results should quiet the critics who claim that Bernie can’t win. It’s pretty clear he can.”

With a crowd of 8,000 cheering his announcements of Saturday night’s caucus wins, Sanders spoke of momentum as a force that might yet transform the Democratic race. “This is what momentum is,” he said. “When we began this campaign we were at 3 or 4 percent in the polls—60 points behind Secretary Clinton. The other day the latest poll that I have seen has us one point up.”

Most national polls still give Clinton the lead. But that reference to a new Bloomberg Poll—which put Sanders at 49 percent to 48 percent for Clinton—drew wild cheers from the Madison crowd, as did the senator’s outlining of a scenario for how to get from here to there.

“We think we have a lot of momentum,” Sanders told the Wisconsinites. “We want to take that momentum here to this beautiful state, and if we do well here in Wisconsin, we do well in New York State, we do well in California, you know what, we’re on our way to the White House.”

The senator will get pushback against that sort of talk. He’ll have to fight for Wisconsin, where Clinton is set to mount a serious campaign that takes her to the state’s largest cities and several smaller ones. And New York, the state Clinton represented for eight years, will be a tough nut for Sanders to crack.

But Cantor, the executive director of a labor-backed progressive party with deep roots in New York politics, says he is convinced that “The political revolution is growing. Every day, Bernie Sanders is inspiring Americans to take the brave step of voting for the future we want to see, and not just what the political and financial elite tells us we’re allowed to have.”